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🐔 Animal Ordinances/Breed Restrictions

Breed Restrictions: Corona vs Riverside

How do breed restrictions rules compare between Corona, CA and Riverside, CA?

Corona has fewer restrictions than Riverside.

Corona, CA

Riverside County

Few Restrictions

Corona does not enforce breed-specific legislation (BSL) banning specific dog breeds. California Food and Agriculture Code §31683 prohibits cities from declaring a dog dangerous solely based on breed. However, breed-specific spay/neuter requirements are permitted, and dangerous or vicious dog determinations apply to individual animals regardless of breed.

View full Corona rules →

Riverside, CA

Riverside County

Heavy Restrictions

California Food & Agricultural Code §31683 prohibits cities and counties from banning specific breeds, but allows breed-specific spay/neuter rules. Riverside County Code §6.08.125 — which applies inside the City of Riverside through RCDAS enforcement — requires every pit bull over 4 months old to be spayed or neutered.

View full Riverside rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactCoronaRiverside
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Breed ban?-No — preempted by Cal. Food & Ag. Code §31683
Mandatory spay/neuter breed-Pit bulls over 4 months old
Authority for breed-specific S/N-Cal. Health & Safety Code §122331
Code section-Riverside County Code §6.08.125
Covered breeds-Staffordshire Bull Terrier, American Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, identifiable mixes
Dangerous-dog standard-Behavior-based per Cal. Food & Ag. Code §§31601–31683

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Corona FAQ

Riverside FAQ

Can the City of Riverside ban pit bulls?

No. California Food & Agricultural Code §31683 prohibits any California city or county from declaring a dog potentially dangerous or vicious based on breed alone, which effectively prevents breed bans. The City may, however, enforce the County's mandatory pit-bull spay/neuter rule under Riverside County Code §6.08.125.

What if my pit bull is a registered show dog?

Subsection D of §6.08.125 exempts dogs whose owners are registered breeders with the Riverside County Department of Animal Services. Show or breeding status alone does not exempt the dog — you must hold the County breeder registration.

Are other breeds (Rottweiler, Doberman, German Shepherd) restricted?

No. The mandatory spay/neuter rule in §6.08.125 applies only to the three pit bull breeds and their identifiable mixes. Other breeds are regulated only behaviorally under California's potentially dangerous / vicious dog statute (Food & Ag. Code §§31601–31683).

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